Joseph Jonas
JONAS, JOSEPH (1792–1869), English-born jeweler who was Ohio's earliest permanent Jewish settler. Jonas arrived at Cincinnati in 1817 and in 1824 became president of the newly founded Bene Israel Congregation, the first in Ohio. He and his brother Abraham both married daughters of Gershom Mendes Seixas. Some years after Rachel Seixas' death, Jonas married Martha Oppenheim. Jonas wrote "The Jews of Ohio" for Isaac Leeser's Occident in 1842. He was a leading freemason and politician and helped organize Cincinnati's Democratic Party. While serving in the Ohio legislature in 1860–61, he advocated compromise with the South. Jonas moved to Alabama in 1867. His brother ABRAHAM (1801–1864) arrived in Cincinnati
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
JOSEPH: Jonas, in: Occident, 1 (1843–44), 547–50; 2 (1844–45), 29–31, 143–7, 244–7; D. Philipson, in: AJHSP, 8 (1900), 44–57; B. Koln, American Jewry and the Civil War (1951, paperback 1961), 189. ABRAHAM: E. Hertz, in: American Hebrew (Aug. 8, 1927), 327, 342; A. Harkens, in: AJHSP, 17 (1909), 123ff. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN: D. Philipson, in: AJHSP, 8 (1900), 53; I. Harkens, ibid., 17 (1909), 127; AJBY, 2 (1900/01), 518–9.
Sources: Encyclopaedia Judaica. © 2008 The Gale Group. All Rights Reserved.